---
name: managing-spinal-cord-injury-rehabilitation
language: en
description: Structures SCI rehab with ASIA classification, functional expectations, and complication prevention. Use when managing SCI rehab, documenting ASIA scores, or planning SCI recovery goals.
tags:
  - management
  - rehabilitation-medicine
metadata:
  author: casemark
  practice_areas:
    - Physical Therapy
    - Occupational Therapy
    - Rehabilitation Medicine
  document_types:
    - Management Report
  skill_modes:
    - Management
    - Coordination
---

# Managing Spinal Cord Injury Rehabilitation

Structures spinal cord injury rehabilitation using the ASIA (American Spinal Injury Association) International Standards for Neurological Classification of SCI (ISNCSCI), functional expectations by neurological level, complication prevention protocols, and specialized outcome measures. Covers complete and incomplete injuries across cervical, thoracic, and lumbar levels.

## Why This Skill Exists

Spinal cord injury is among the most complex rehabilitation diagnoses, requiring coordinated management of motor, sensory, autonomic, bowel, bladder, and skin integrity across the injury continuum. The ASIA Impairment Scale (AIS) classification determines prognosis, functional expectations, equipment needs, and lifetime care costs. Functional expectations for a C6 complete SCI are fundamentally different from a T10 complete SCI, and documentation must reflect level-specific goals. CMS IRF-PAI data, FIM tracking, and CARF standards all apply. SCI complications (autonomic dysreflexia, pressure injuries, DVT, heterotopic ossification, neurogenic bowel/bladder) carry significant morbidity and mortality risk. This skill ensures ASIA classification accuracy, level-appropriate goal setting, and systematic complication prevention documentation.

---

## Checkpoint A — Intake Verification

Before beginning SCI rehabilitation, confirm:

**Required clinical questions:**
- What is the injury mechanism and vertebral level of injury (fracture/dislocation level vs. neurological level)?
- Was surgical stabilization performed and what are the spinal precautions?
- What is the ASIA classification (AIS A-E) and neurological level from the acute care ISNCSCI exam?
- Is there evidence of sacral sparing (voluntary anal contraction, deep anal pressure, S4-5 sensation)?
- What is the current bowel and bladder management program?
- What is the patient's pre-injury functional status, occupation, and social support?

**Required documents:**
- Spinal imaging (MRI, CT) with fracture/injury characterization
- Surgical report if stabilization performed (fusion levels, hardware, precautions)
- Acute care ISNCSCI examination with motor and sensory scores
- Current medication list (antispasmodics, anticoagulants, pain medications, bowel program medications)
- Urology consultation (urodynamics, bladder management plan)
- Skin assessment documentation (pressure injury risk, existing wounds)

---

## Step 1 — Perform ASIA/ISNCSCI Classification

**Motor examination (key muscles, graded 0-5):**

| Level | Key Muscle | Function |
|---|---|---|
| C5 | Elbow flexors (biceps, brachialis) | Elbow flexion |
| C6 | Wrist extensors (extensor carpi radialis) | Wrist extension |
| C7 | Elbow extensors (triceps) | Elbow extension |
| C8 | Finger flexors (FDP to middle finger) | Finger flexion |
| T1 | Small finger abductors (abductor digiti minimi) | Finger abduction |
| L2 | Hip flexors (iliopsoas) | Hip flexion |
| L3 | Knee extensors (quadriceps) | Knee extension |
| L4 | Ankle dorsiflexors (tibialis anterior) | Ankle dorsiflexion |
| L5 | Long toe extensors (extensor hallucis longus) | Great toe extension |
| S1 | Ankle plantarflexors (gastrocnemius/soleus) | Ankle plantarflexion |

**Sensory examination:**
- Light touch and pin prick tested at 28 dermatomes bilaterally (C2-S4/5)
- Each scored: 0 = absent, 1 = impaired, 2 = normal, NT = not testable
- Total light touch score: 0-112; Total pin prick score: 0-112

**Determine neurological level of injury (NLI):**
- Most caudal level with intact motor (≥3/5) AND sensory (2/2) function bilaterally
- Motor level and sensory level may differ — document each

**ASIA Impairment Scale (AIS):**
- **AIS A (Complete):** No motor or sensory function in S4-S5 (no sacral sparing)
- **AIS B (Sensory incomplete):** Sensory but no motor function below NLI including S4-S5
- **AIS C (Motor incomplete):** Motor function below NLI; more than half of key muscles below NLI have grade <3
- **AIS D (Motor incomplete):** Motor function below NLI; at least half of key muscles below NLI have grade ≥3
- **AIS E (Normal):** Motor and sensory function normal in all segments

**Zone of partial preservation (ZPP):** For AIS A only — most caudal segment with some motor or sensory function below the NLI.

## Step 2 — Set Level-Specific Functional Expectations

Functional outcomes are strongly predicted by neurological level and AIS grade:

**Cervical complete (AIS A) functional expectations:**

| NLI | Expected Functional Outcomes | Equipment |
|---|---|---|
| C4 | Dependent in all mobility and self-care; power wheelchair with head/chin control; ventilator-dependent possible | Power wheelchair, hospital bed, Hoyer lift, ventilator if needed |
| C5 | Feeds self with setup/devices; assists with UB dressing; dependent LE dressing/transfers; power wheelchair with hand control | Power wheelchair, mobile arm supports, adaptive devices |
| C6 | Independent feeding, grooming, UB dressing with devices; may do lateral transfer with board; manual wheelchair on flat surfaces possible | Manual/power wheelchair, transfer board, tenodesis splint, adaptive devices |
| C7 | Independent self-care with devices; independent transfers; manual wheelchair on most surfaces; may drive with hand controls | Manual wheelchair, shower chair, hand controls for vehicle |
| T1-T9 | Independent self-care; independent wheelchair mobility all surfaces; standing frame for physiological benefits | Manual wheelchair, standing frame, cushion |
| T10-L1 | As above; potential for therapeutic ambulation with KAFOs and forearm crutches (high energy cost) | KAFOs, forearm crutches, manual wheelchair primary |
| L2-S1 | Community ambulation potential with AFOs/KAFOs depending on level; wheelchair for long distances | AFOs, forearm crutches or cane, wheelchair for distances |

**Incomplete injuries (AIS C-D):** Functional expectations are more variable and dependent on specific muscle recovery; prognosis for ambulation is significantly better with AIS D than C.

## Step 3 — Implement SCI-Specific Rehabilitation Interventions

**Motor training:**
- Strengthening: All innervated muscles to maximum grade; compensatory strengthening above the level
- Transfer training: Level-specific technique (lateral/sliding board for C6-C7, depression transfers for T-level, stand-pivot for incomplete)
- Wheelchair skills: Propulsion, wheelies, curb negotiation, ramp management, car transfers
- Ambulation training (for incomplete injuries and low-level paraplegia): Parallel bars → walker → crutches → cane; body-weight supported treadmill training for incomplete injuries (evidence supports locomotor training for AIS C-D)

**Activity-based therapy (for incomplete injuries):**
- Locomotor training (body-weight supported treadmill) per NeuroRecovery Network protocols
- Functional electrical stimulation (FES) cycling or walking
- Task-specific upper extremity training

**Bowel and bladder program (coordinate with nursing and urology):**
- Neurogenic bladder: Clean intermittent catheterization (CIC) every 4-6 hours; document catheterization volumes, goal <500ml per catheterization
- Neurogenic bowel: Timed bowel program (every day or every other day); digital stimulation or suppository; document consistency and effectiveness
- Teach patient self-catheterization when hand function permits (C7 and below typically)

**Skin protection program:**
- Pressure relief: Weight shifts every 15-30 minutes (wheelchair); turning schedule every 2 hours (bed)
- Skin inspection: Teach self-inspection with mirror; check ischial tuberosities, sacrum, trochanters, heels
- Wheelchair cushion: Appropriate pressure-relieving cushion; document type and pressure mapping results
- Document Braden Scale score at each reassessment

## Step 4 — Monitor and Prevent SCI-Specific Complications

**Autonomic dysreflexia (AD) — life-threatening emergency for T6 and above:**
- Symptoms: Sudden severe hypertension (SBP >20-40 mmHg above baseline), pounding headache, flushing/sweating above injury level, bradycardia
- Triggers: Bladder distension (most common), bowel impaction, skin breakdown, tight clothing, UTI
- Immediate action: Sit patient up, loosen clothing, check and empty bladder, check for fecal impaction
- Document AD episodes: precipitant, BP readings, interventions, resolution
- Provide AD wallet card to patient

**Deep vein thrombosis (DVT):**
- High risk in first 3 months post-SCI
- Prophylaxis per physician orders (LMWH, compression stockings, SCDs)
- Monitor: calf circumference daily, report unilateral LE edema or warmth

**Heterotopic ossification (HO):**
- Onset typically 1-4 months post-injury; hips most common location
- Monitor for decreased ROM, swelling, warmth, elevated alkaline phosphatase
- Document ROM serial measurements — loss of ROM is early indicator

**Respiratory management (cervical injuries):**
- Assess cough effectiveness: peak cough flow <270 L/min requires assisted cough techniques
- Incentive spirometry: monitor and document forced vital capacity (FVC) serially
- Quad coughing / manually assisted cough for patients with weak cough

**Psychological adjustment:**
- Depression screening (PHQ-9) at admission and monthly
- Peer support program referral
- Sexuality counseling (address proactively per SCI rehabilitation standards)

## Step 5 — Plan Discharge and Lifetime SCI Management

- **Equipment list:** Wheelchair, cushion, transfer equipment, ADL devices, bowel/bladder supplies, home medical equipment
- **Home modification:** Accessibility assessment (doorway width ≥32 inches, ramp for entry, roll-in shower, lowered countertops)
- **Caregiver training:** Document hours of training completed, competencies demonstrated (transfers, skin checks, bowel program, catheterization, AD recognition)
- **Community reintegration:** Driving evaluation referral, vocational rehabilitation referral, recreation/adaptive sport programs
- **Follow-up schedule:** Annual SCI comprehensive evaluation at SCI center; urology follow-up; skin clinic; equipment maintenance
- **Lifetime care plan:** For medicolegal cases, document projected lifetime needs (equipment replacement, attendant care hours, medical follow-up)

---

## Checkpoint B — Pre-Finalization Review

Before finalizing SCI rehabilitation documentation:

- [ ] ISNCSCI examination complete with motor scores, sensory scores, NLI, and AIS grade
- [ ] Sacral sparing assessed and documented (VAC, DAP, S4-5 sensation)
- [ ] Functional expectations match neurological level and AIS classification
- [ ] SCI-specific interventions documented (wheelchair skills, transfers, bowel/bladder, skin)
- [ ] Complication prevention protocols in place (AD, DVT, HO, skin, respiratory)
- [ ] FIM scores tracked (admission, weekly, discharge)
- [ ] Equipment prescription justified by neurological level and functional needs
- [ ] Home modification assessment completed
- [ ] Caregiver training documented with competencies
- [ ] Discharge plan includes lifetime SCI management needs

---

## Quality Audit

- [ ] ISNCSCI scoring follows ASIA examination rules exactly (key muscles, 28 dermatomes, sacral exam)
- [ ] AIS grade correctly assigned using the ASIA classification algorithm
- [ ] Zone of partial preservation documented for AIS A injuries
- [ ] Functional goals align with published SCI functional expectations for the NLI
- [ ] Autonomic dysreflexia protocol documented for T6 and above injuries
- [ ] Bowel and bladder program documented with schedule, method, and effectiveness
- [ ] Skin integrity assessment with Braden score at each reassessment
- [ ] Respiratory function (FVC, peak cough flow) monitored for cervical injuries
- [ ] All [VERIFY] flags resolved or escalated to physiatrist
- [ ] Documentation meets IRF-PAI, CMS, and CARF SCI program standards

---

## Guidelines

- ASIA/ISNCSCI examination must be performed by a trained examiner following the published examination rules precisely — improper technique invalidates classification
- Complete vs. incomplete determination requires sacral sparing assessment — this is the single most important prognostic indicator
- AIS B injuries with preserved pin prick sensation (vs. light touch only) have significantly better motor recovery prognosis
- Functional expectations are guidelines, not limits — individual patient goals and motivation influence outcomes beyond the neurological level
- Autonomic dysreflexia is a medical emergency — every SCI patient T6 and above must have a documented AD plan and carry an AD card
- SCI rehabilitation requires a minimum length of stay significantly longer than most other IRF diagnoses — document ongoing skilled needs at each team conference
- Early mobilization and intensive rehabilitation (3+ hours/day) are the standard of care; delays in rehabilitation initiation correlate with poorer outcomes
- Locomotor training has the strongest evidence for motor incomplete injuries (AIS C-D) — initiate when medically stable
- Lifetime care planning is often needed for medicolegal purposes — document current functional status, equipment needs, and projected ongoing care requirements
- SCI rehabilitation is a CARF-accreditable specialty program — adhere to CARF SCI program standards for interdisciplinary care, patient education, and outcome measurement
